Developing a Nutrition Education Program for Children/Adolescents with Eating Challenges

As seen in both unfolding cases, Mia and Thomas, nutrition affects overall health. Both children have disordered eating. Mia is underweight and snacks on sugary foods that cause her to have severe dental caries. Thomas, on the other hand, is an overeater who suffers from obesity and depression and is at high risk for diabetes. Although the children present opposite ends of the spectrum of “disordered eating,” both suffer from poor nutrition. We know that Mia’s nutrition has affected her oral health. We do not know the status of Thomas’ oral health at this time.

Childhood dental caries are among the most prevalent health problems facing American infants, children, and adolescents. Childhood overweight and obesity have reached epidemic proportions. In 2009–2012, nearly one in three youth ages 2 to 19 years were overweight or obese (2015–2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, p. 2).

There are many common risk factors for both obesity and oral health problems in childhood. By focusing on these common risk factors we can decrease both the rates of obesity and dental disease. Interprofessional collaboration between medical and dental health care teams is essential in addressing these two most prevalent diseases of childhood.

This teaching strategy focuses on developing competencies to educate parents and children on the importance of good nutrition in order to promote good oral health and prevent obesity.

2. Identify Risks for Obesity and Oral Health Problems in an Adolescent in a school-based clinic

Working with a group of adolescents, students can determine risk for nutritional disorders and integrate healthy eating and oral health for adolescents. (Supplies: 3 snacks with labels, 5 beverages with labels: water, juice, soda, sports drink, milk)

Determine if adolescent is overweight or obese using CDC BMI calculator (the students will need access to the adolescent’s age, weight, and height, as well as DOB)

Develop a motivational interview (MI) texting program to encourage adolescent to make smart food choices to prevent obesity and oral health problems. Adolescents will partner with each other and send open-ended MI texts to each other every day for one week. Each text must have 3 exchanges.

Student #1 txt: “What did you do that was healthy this week and makes you proud?”

Student 2 answers and Student 1 responds…

Student #2 txt: “What did you eat when you and your friends went out on Saturday?”

Read the following article which describes transitioning the traditional HEENT exam to the HEENOT exam to include the oral cavity: Haber, J., Hartnett, E., Allen, K., Hallas, D., Dorsen, C., Lange-Kessler, J., … Wholihan, D. (2015). Putting the mouth back in the head: HEENT to HEENOT. American Journal of Public Health, 105(3), 437-441. Retrieved from http://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/full/10.2105/AJPH.2014.302495

Become familiar with Smiles for Life, an Interprofessional Oral Health Curriculum consisting of eight 45-minute courses that contain the core components of oral health throughout the lifespan. The Smiles for Life curriculum format can be easily implemented in an academic setting. Included is a comprehensive set of educational objectives based on the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) competencies, test questions, resources for further learning, oral health web links, an implementation guide, and detailed module outlines. CE credit is available for each module upon completion. The faculty member should choose “Teach Curriculum” Course 2 – Child Oral Health. Each course has downloadable slides and speaker notes for class presentation. The slides can be arranged as you wish using the SFL slide sorter on the right side of the page.

Become familiar with Cavity Free Kids, http://cavityfreekids.org, an oral health education program that contains many oral health and nutrition learning activities designed for use in the community for pregnant women and young children. Retrieved from www.smilesforlifeoralhealth.org